Among the very large number of polymeric materials that have been proposed in the field of orthopedics, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is one of the most attractive thanks to its flexibility, thermal resistance, mechanical strength and durability. Several studies were proposed that interface nano- or micro-structured surfaces with mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), demonstrating the potential of this technology for promoting osteogenesis. All these studies were carried out on other biomaterials than PET, which remains almost un-investigated in terms of cell shaping, alignment and differentiation. In a previous study, we developed a hot-embossing method to transfer nano-textures (down to below 100 nm lateral size) onto PET substrate, and demonstrated that PET nanogratings (NGs) can optimally stimulate hMSC mechanotransduction mechanism. Specifically, we showed that cell and nuclear morphology, and cytoskeletal components are similarly affected by NGs, and that NG ridge sizes of 500 nm and 1 μm were both effective in stimulating cell polarization, without compromising cell viability. We study the effect of PET 350-depth nanogratings (NGs) having ridge and groove lateral size of 500 nm (T1) or 1 µm (T2), on bone-marrow human MSC (hMSC) differentiation towards the osteogenic fate. In particular, we cultured hMSCs on PET NGs having different periodicity and measured the expression of a complete set of genes characterizing osteo-differentiation, at different time-points from day 3 up to day 21. In order to evaluate how the contact interaction with PET NGs affects hMSC differentiation, the expression of a set of genes (RUNX2, COL1A1, ALPL, BMP2 and IBSP) characterizing osteogenesis was measured by RT-qPCR. BMP2 and IBSP were the most sensitive to the presence of the engineered surfaces The production of bone matrix was finally evaluated at the end of the differentiation period in terms of morphology, substrate coverage and alignment to the underlying topography. Overall, the data show that among the tested genes, BMP2 and IBSP are the most sensitive to the presence of the engineered surfaces. Although for RUNX2, COL1A1 and ALPL we measured only small modifications, upregulation of BMP2 and IBSP was relevant, especially in case of Osteogenic Medium (OM) and for the T2 geometry. This result suggests the T2 substrate as the most promising structure for stimulating hMSCs towards osteogenic maturation We demonstrate that these substrates, especially the T2, can promote the osteogenic phenotype more efficiently than standard flat surfaces and that this effect is more marked if cells are cultured in osteogenic medium than in basal medium. Finally, we show that the shape and disposition of calcium hydroxyapatite granules on the different substrates was influenced by the substrate symmetry, being more elongated and spatially organized on NGs than on flat surfaces. This study demonstrates that PET nanogratings can promote osteogenic differentiation of hMSC
Aim of this study is to design, develop and preclinical test PET nanostructured scaffolds for the transplantation and differentiation of MSCs in the treatment of bone defects. The interaction of cells with nanotopographical features has proven to be an important signaling modality in controlling MSC differentiation. The wide bone defects, caused by trauma, tumor, infectious, periprosthetic osteolysis, need to be surgically treated because their low potential of repair. Nowadays the bone allograft and autograft represent 80% of all transplantation done in the world. However this technique shows many disadvantages, such as the risk of infections, the immunological rejection, the low bone availability and the high costs. These reasons have motivated extensive research to find alternative strategies. As shown in literature, the future strategies are based on the synergic combination of different methodologies: use of biomimetic scaffold in order to support bone regeneration, use of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and growth factors. Successful regeneration necessitates the development of tissue-inducing scaffolds that mimic the hierarchical architecture of native tissue extracellular matrix (ECM). Cells in nature recognise and interact with the surface topography they are exposed to via ECM proteins. Here we are going to show the guidelines recently published for the design and development of nanostructured scaffolds for the bone regeneration, and the morphofunctional changing of MSCs interacting with nanogratings.Summary
Introduction